Today, a handful of gifted artisans are taking hammer and blowtorch in hand to correct the imbalance between function and form, turning their PCs, keyboards, MP3 players, and cell phones into unique works of art that recall the aesthetic sensibilities of a bygone era. In this slideshow, we'll look at the work of five of these makers (as they call themselves).

Regrettably, the Computational Engine no longer exists as the functioning Windows XP PC it once was. Nagy dismantled it prior to a cross-country move, and it has been sitting in storage for the past year and a half. He's currently working on an improved version.

A former Web designer from New Jersey, now relocated to California, the Datamancer is now a full-time, professional commission artist.

With its wooden body, claw feet, copper keyboard, and elaborate display of clockwork under glass, this laptop isn't an ideal candidate for slipping into your flight bag and carrying through airport security. Its 10-pound weight is traveler-unfriendly, too.

Built around a Hewlett-Packard ZT1000, and running both Windows XP and Ubuntu Linux, the laptop sports leather wrist pads, engraved brass accents, and an antique clock-winding key in place of the usual, boring On button.

The user is supposed to shut down the Steampunk Laptop with a feather. Watch this video for a demonstration of this most civilized way to boot up and shut down.

For the sake of our wrists, keyboards must feel good. But why can't they look good, as well?

When commissioned by a female client, the Datamancer set out to create a wrist-friendly keyboard with "some elegant, feminine design features." These include a brass leaf-pattern trim, and cut-glass, violet-colored LEDs that could have come from the Disney's version of 20000 Leagues Under the Sea.

The keyboard's ergonomic features include a burgundy wrist pad (removable for cleaning) and a buttonless touchpad. This keyboard slants away from rather than toward the user. "It looks odd at first, but actually makes for a very comfortable typing position."

I don't know much about the Croatian artist Ivan Mavrovic. His blog has the promising name Mental Design, but I don't read Croatian, and the English translations don't help much.

I can't even tell you whether the gear-, screw-, and spring-adorned cell phone pictured here still works. It apparently started life as a Nokia.

The gears and screws look far more utilitarian than the woodwork and polished brash of American Steampunk mods, but they are strictly decorative. Perhaps that's the result of decades of Communist rule: Post-Socialist Magic Realism is clearly a different aesthetic from Antique English Victoriana.

As proprietor of a Website called The Steampunk Workshop, Jake von Slatt can't use a dull-looking mass-produced PC. So he built his dream machine. And yes, he uses it regularly.

He started with a 24-inch Soyo LCD monitor, which he trimmed down to size with a table saw ("Don't try this at home," he warns in a demonstration video.) He then mounted the monitor on an aluminum plate that also supports a 3.2GHz P4 motherboard and an nVidia graphics board.

Von Slatt custom-built a copper heat sink, complete with fan; then he mounted two 320GB drives on vibration mounts at the top of the case. And he placed it all in a knick-knack shelf that he found at the dump. You'll find a full description of the manufacturing process at the Workshop.

In real life, von Slatt is a Linux system administrator for a Massachusetts-based R&D company. "I really didn't discover Steampunk so much [as] I discovered...the term Steampunk fit so well the things that I was already doing."

You spend an awful lot of time staring at your monitor. Wouldn't it be nice to have something elegant to look at?

Von Slatt started this project with a Dell 1907FP flat-panel monitor; and though he "hesitated to tear open a $300 monitor that was still under warantee [sic], art must be served."

Rather than replacing the monitor's steel casing, he aged it with a careful application of paint. Then he added a couple of 19th-century gas-lamp arms and a base, and he really had something to look at. You'll find a more detailed account at the Steampunk Workshop.

You can enhance the ambience of any location through the judicious application of "Musical Programme Type Threes" (MP3s) directly into your aural tympanum. Why endure the cacophany of a 21st-century city when you can listen instead to Gilbert and Sullivan?

Molly Michelle Friedrich made the headphones of her Ambience Enhancer first. She combined the working parts of a Sony MDR-006 (which she found at a bus stop) with a pair of vintage Cannonball Empire headphones purchased on eBay. "They sound great!"

But such headphones want to be plugged into something aesthetically pleasing. So Friedrich sewed a cover for her Sansa 2GB MP3 player; added leather, brass, and a strap; and had a music player that she could elegantly wear.

Friedrich is a professional artist living "mostly" in Seattle. She describes her favorite music as "Bavarian yak herding music played on electric zither." She works primarily in jewelry, much of it with a Steampunk theme. You'll find her work at Porkshanks.deviantart.com.

Turn a Commodore 64 into an antique? Now that's redundant. On the other hand, this early, 8-bit computer never looked this good in its first incarnation.

Working on a commission from Robert Bernardo of the Bay Area C64 User group, Molly Michelle Friedrich turned the old computer into something that looked even older, with wood paneling, brass trim, and decorative keys.

"The buyer was working with a budgetary restriction so I had to simplify it as much as possible," admits Friedrich. Her dream design, which she has posted on Flickr, includes a blue glow emanating from within the machine, as well as a light-up logo.